n1857 2lclilioiilfter - phillipian archivespdf.phillipian.net/1957/04251957.pdf · japanese cherry...

6
First Issue Published Weekly n1857 2LclILioiIlfTer kVOL. 81, NO.-2,-f PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. THURSDAY, APRIL 25,1957 PRICE 15 CENTS Two Student Shows Planned For May Production ~,e~f iteida P. A. And Bradford To Stage "Brigadoon" Be Shown ~~Steinkamp, Higgins, Parke To Take Leads Re ShownBy Workshop by WILLIAM C. WEE 1 ~~~~~~~~On the evenings of May 3 and 4 G. W. will resound to the melodies and highland rhythms The spi ing lplay of the Dramna Workshop thiS year 1~'ill of "Brigadoon", the musical play by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, who scored be "Ten Little Indians", a mystery by Agatha Christie. She is their first success with "Brigadoon"; their latest collaboration is the phenomenally suc- noted for the humor and suspense of her works, and was the - cessful "My Fair Lady". In writer of the recent "Witness - presenting "B rigadoon", Phillips i:for the Prosecution." The play, ~'- - shown Saturday night, May 18, inn d the leads, there is an onstage cho- a place of the movies, admission freeLO ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ru of twenty-four. The story con- pltas adptdf o the a isage frou c nP A cerns a little village in the high- Ite book ade o the tere Weo lands of Scotland which conmes to INoe by MisCrsi.Te"Ae ea ig P oec roedynd then vanishesr Refacing Project life~~~ just once every hundred years, was published in 1939, and the play During the twenties and on into Io appeared on Broadway in 1944. the early thirties, Mr. Thomas ~ once more into the mist. Two Am- aThe plot, as quoted from the resu- Cochran spent close t one million- - ericans on a hunting trip stumble upon the village and the hero falls mthhey resda tiollow si: ing thear lscl gund Theauny - in love with a charming country the liTTLE INDIANS:was spen sconl brudg ne omi- girl. There is a good deal of come- TEN LITTLE INDIANS was spent on building new dormi- ~~~~~~~dy from the hero's cynical friend STORY OF THE PLAY tories and other edifices such as the adahgln is'h ci' "The "ten little Indians"? refers chapel and George Washington say no", a lot of singing and dan- to the cluster of statuettes on te Hall, on the moving of Pearson cing, and an enchantingly roman- mantelpiece of a weird country tcsoy 0 hose n anislnd ff te castof and on the planting of many at- The leading roles are filled by Devon, when the play opens and tractive or rare trees and shrubsJo Hign astehrRc o:t h usr hm mdaiounid the campus. The chief land - -~ o ign stehrRc to the nursery rhyme ebossed scaping architets involved in thes,~Steinkamp as his friend, Jean above them, tescapng ho ahltl aiachitges invoei thesstead White as the girl the hero falls Inabov e th ,tli ng howt untcl lite r adclc a g s w ret e Omea for, Barbara Copeland as a gener- Indin mt hs dathuntl tereBrothers - designers of Centril was none. To this queer Byzantine Pat-k in New York, the English -~'~ - ous lassie; Bill Hegeman as Mr. Mnvituaedi asseeked byetarys Gardens in Munich, and the Bos- ~ undie, e o leader of the town, ;nvited for a week end by a mys- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lenore Martin and Rod Parke as iterious host. The guests have never tnEpaae Bill Hegemnan practices with Rod Parke and Lenore Martin in Brigadoon the two young Scottish lovers and mtone another before, nor have PRaUNING Rehearsal. (Photo by Othnmer) John Ivs Sherry Ann Holt, John (Continued on Page Three) D A TLeonarde and Daniel Wexler in Although the campus was in su- P. A. ToOf rSerge Dirffrectradpodcro.h Speaks ~perb condition after the refacing9, Dirctr ndprduerofth r Kiinsey Sp ak during the thirty-odd years since (,cc-mL lA i f production is Mr. Ralph H. R. L. urn-. iii Ti T then many trees have gone wi th-~ Cossack% Ch 4 oruls AndI[ DUancers Symonds and musical director is ii MVid~e E~ast Inl out pruning, the shrubs have lost O Mr. William Schneider. The one their original shape, and many In Celebjrity Series O Frid ay permanent set has been designed C Al~~~~.1 ~ plants have suffered injury due to 7J by Mrs. Powel and built by Mr. orning A-ssembliy huricanes and storms. Since the P. A. will play host to Serge Jai-off's Don Cossack Chorus Leavitt and the stage crew. All the This Wednesday's speaker was matnae dgiepatent a be and Dancers this Friday, the twenty-six of April. The Don ticetsrmne n are gog for Fia ih' r. David Kinsey, who talked unbet:ieteepajste efrac n1r on o boutthe iddl Eas andits arocare they deserve, many indivi- Cossack's are a group founded by Serge Jaroff, who still con- Saturday's. u em Midsey Ea gadute pof duals around the school have taken ducts te.-, shortly after the- erand College, has been in s- note and are now attempting to re- end of World War One. They spe- Mrs.Morg n Ha elfor the past few years, help- medy the situation. Mr. Peterson, cialize in Russian music, both for M ra I!with the management of the fr example, has planted severalsign and dancing. international Work Camps. Japanese cherry trees at key Only eight of "the original Cos- - Boto E hiitO Mtr. Kinsey opened his lecture by points on the campus. These tecs sacks", who started with Jaroff ating that the U.S. has nover will soon bloom, their- pink flowers 14a Self emaiPortraeitsv adding muht.h perneo admit-ably trained the new-comers.14 S l - o t is st and its poblems until thetegrud.U erhespri Ja-off, the conductor-, molds their OlMnaArlF adMr st 6 months. He felt that this sion of Mrs. Leaf, a portion of this voices, both old andI new, into the Oan onda Apriei'.MadM spring's voluntary work crew has distinctive Russian ganaopenedsatseris based on self- Airesing interest is caused by th spring' luntary flwrki cpore hsistntv usa hioista portraiture at the Margaret Brown atthat the British are leavingbe lnigfoesi apaora-e the dawing caa-d of the show - Gallery in Boston. The collection he territor-y. Therefore there is a ate locations around many of the with hardly any touble at all. Of fourteen pictures are all new acuum left, and the U.S. would faculty houses. These, however. ORIGINAL GROUP works and have never been exibit- ike to fill it. But we have many aie but two of many private at- The Don Cossack's are perhaps edbfoe 0D ipetitors, notably Russia, who tem"pts at relandscaping the P.A. one of the most original choral e eoe tas been gaining much prestige, campus. groups today. They have a very yundiferent cMas lorgain hifs oc ately by sellin garms to the Mid- COORDINATION wide range of voices, both bass andfrn shaces, M-'Mra a o~l atr onre.tenor, and sometimes their ar- achieved a unique way of showing i h rEast iscpratt ihteie i oriaigrneet oundamotelkean her own Personality. For example, ther countries, Mr. Kinsey be- these individual enterprises into orchestra. The chorus achieves mu-- if the feeling of sadness is desired, It eves mainly because of its oil, one concerted effort, the Campus sical effects unlike those of any Serge Jaroff leads the Don Cossack a sade of blue or puiple might be 5 pe cen ofEurope's oil comes Landscape Project Committee has other group. The tenors and basses Chorus, used in the facial coloring, how- rnis region - two-thirds ot been organized with Mrs. Benton have an unmatchable richness sixth, in Geor-ge Washington Hall. ever if gavety is being expressed, te world's oil, as head of the Ladies Committee, which is shown off to great advani- As usual, all student tickets will the color will tend to be much The next point which was and Mr. Morgan - a trained land- tage in the church music be f ree. These may be obtained at brighter. rought up is that of the Arab-JTew scape architect - as chairman of The Don Cossack's program is the printing office in the basement Shape can be us.ed for the same tgnistic interrelationships. In the entir-e enterprise. The plan at divided into three parts. They sing of G. W. on Wednesday from, one purpose. In El Greco's saintly pie- 148 most of the Arabs in Israel the moment is to get either the church, army, and folk music. The to three in the afternoon. tures, for instance, the faces are reforced to leave, but a few re- Ohinstead Brothers or some cm- group's piece-de-resistance is the always painted in a tall and nar- aimed. The International Work parable firm to come back and helo awe-inspiring Russian dances. No LIBRARY INVENTORY row fashion. This is to portray. Camps were set up to help get a reorganize the looks of the campus, doubt the P.A. audience will espe- Aiot20bkshvbesre Aotheir exliample wuld eaveat th ttrunderstanding between the This ob, however, is not merely cially appreciate the soft-soled, p ort 200~n bok he bn rry ohr xml wudb ta h Arabsand Iraeltes b havng one of planting trees in seemingly heavy-footed dancea-s who close this year. It iiould be greatly ap- logwnging lines of a tomb re- them ork ogeter o varous ro- appropriate places, because the ar- each set of songs with rousing preciated by the Library staff if piesent depression. ~ is r isy nor ve chitect in charge is obliged to make shouting and stamping Russian each boy checked his closet, draw- Mrs. Morgan has been a resident at thse caps wrk, ten cted allowances for future buildings, dances. ;ero, etc., for missing books. Miss Of Andover ever since 1940. For a tit which e had witha and future wings. Without this FREE: TicxET IEades also feels that if students are while she combined her art with a cariiP near the Egypt-Israel border, kind of foresight the endeavor The Don Cossack's performance hnksre oal lout ilie oiuth sechasg deote all bofbu hretientoy in which Arabs and Jews mingled might be proved to have been use- will begin at eight-fifteen in the 1 bokq netoar. oswl em h a dvtdalo e iet (Continued on Page Six) less within a few years. evening, Friday, April twenty- l~.nx er painting.

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Page 1: n1857 2LclILioiIlfTer - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1957/04251957.pdf · Japanese cherry trees ... the Campus sical effects unlike those of any Serge Jaroff leads the Don

First Issue Published Weeklyn1857 2LclILioiIlfTerkVOL. 81, NO.-2,-f PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASS. THURSDAY, APRIL 25,1957 PRICE 15 CENTS

Two Student Shows Planned For May Production~,e~f iteida P. A. And Bradford To Stage "Brigadoon"

Be Shown ~~Steinkamp, Higgins, Parke To Take LeadsRe ShownBy Workshop by WILLIAM C. WEE1 ~~~~~~~~On the evenings of May 3 and 4 G. W. will resound to the melodies and highland rhythmsThe spi ing lplay of the Dramna Workshop thiS year 1~'ill of "Brigadoon", the musical play by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, who scored

be "Ten Little Indians", a mystery by Agatha Christie. She is their first success with "Brigadoon"; their latest collaboration is the phenomenally suc-noted for the humor and suspense of her works, and was the - cessful "My Fair Lady". Inwriter of the recent "Witness

- presenting "B rigadoon", Phillipsi:for the Prosecution." The play, ~'-

-

shown Saturday night, May 18, inn d the leads, there is an onstage cho-a place of the movies, admission freeLO ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ru of twenty-four. The story con-pltas adptdf o the a isage frou c nP A cerns a little village in the high-Ite book ade o the tere Weo lands of Scotland which conmes toINoe by MisCrsi.Te"Ae ea ig P oec roedynd then vanishesrRefacing Project life~~~ just once every hundred years,

was published in 1939, and the play During the twenties and on intoIo appeared on Broadway in 1944. the early thirties, Mr. Thomas ~ once more into the mist. Two Am-aThe plot, as quoted from the resu- Cochran spent close t one million- - ericans on a hunting trip stumble

upon the village and the hero fallsmthhey resda tiollow si: ing thear lscl gund Theauny - in love with a charming countrythe liTTLE INDIANS:was spen sconl brudg ne omi- girl. There is a good deal of come-TEN LITTLE INDIANS was spent on building new dormi- ~~~~~~~dy from the hero's cynical friendSTORY OF THE PLAY tories and other edifices such as the adahgln is'h ci'"The "ten little Indians"? refers chapel and George Washington say no", a lot of singing and dan-to the cluster of statuettes on te Hall, on the moving of Pearson cing, and an enchantingly roman-mantelpiece of a weird country tcsoy0 hose n anislnd ff te castof and on the planting of many at- The leading roles are filled byDevon, when the play opens and tractive or rare trees and shrubsJo Hign astehrRco:t h usr hm mdaiounid the campus. The chief land - -~ o ign stehrRcto the nursery rhyme ebossed scaping architets involved in thes,~Steinkamp as his friend, Jeanabove them, tescapng ho ahltl aiachitges invoei thesstead White as the girl the hero fallsInabov e th ,tli ng howt untcl lite r adclc a g s w ret e Omea for, Barbara Copeland as a gener-Indin mt hs dathuntl tereBrothers - designers of Centrilwas none. To this queer Byzantine Pat-k in New York, the English -~'~ - ous lassie; Bill Hegeman as Mr.Mnvituaedi asseeked byetarys Gardens in Munich, and the Bos- ~ undie, e o leader of the town,;nvited for a week end by a mys- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lenore Martin and Rod Parke asiterious host. The guests have never tnEpaae Bill Hegemnan practices with Rod Parke and Lenore Martin in Brigadoon the two young Scottish lovers andmtone another before, nor have PRaUNING Rehearsal. (Photo by Othnmer) John Ivs Sherry Ann Holt, John(Continued on Page Three) D A TLeonarde and Daniel Wexler in

Although the campus was in su- P. A. ToOf rSerge Dirffrectradpodcro.hSpeaks ~perb condition after the refacing9, Dirctr ndprduerofthr Kiinsey Sp ak during the thirty-odd years since (,cc-mL lA i f production is Mr. Ralph H. R. L.urn-. iii Ti T then many trees have gone wi th-~ Cossack% Ch4 oruls AndI[ DUancers Symonds and musical director isii MVid~e E~ast Inl out pruning, the shrubs have lost O Mr. William Schneider. The onetheir original shape, and many In Celebjrity Series O Frid ay permanent set has been designedC Al~~~~.1 ~ plants have suffered injury due to 7J by Mrs. Powel and built by Mr.orning A-ssembliy huricanes and storms. Since the P. A. will play host to Serge Jai-off's Don Cossack Chorus Leavitt and the stage crew. All the

This Wednesday's speaker was matnae dgiepatent a be and Dancers this Friday, the twenty-six of April. The Don ticetsrmne n are gog for Fia ih'r. David Kinsey, who talked unbet:ieteepajste efrac n1r on oboutthe iddl Eas andits arocare they deserve, many indivi- Cossack's are a group founded by Serge Jaroff, who still con- Saturday's.u em Midsey Ea gadute pof duals around the school have taken ducts te.-, shortly after the-erand College, has been in s- note and are now attempting to re- end of World War One. They spe- Mrs.Morg n Haelfor the past few years, help- medy the situation. Mr. Peterson, cialize in Russian music, both for M raI!with the management of the fr example, has planted severalsign and dancing.international Work Camps. Japanese cherry trees at key Only eight of "the original Cos- - Boto E hiitOMtr. Kinsey opened his lecture by points on the campus. These tecs sacks", who started with Jaroffating that the U.S. has nover will soon bloom, their- pink flowers 14a Self emaiPortraeitsv

adding muht.h perneo admit-ably trained the new-comers.14 S l - o t isst and its poblems until thetegrud.U erhespri Ja-off, the conductor-, molds their OlMnaArlF adMrst 6 months. He felt that this sion of Mrs. Leaf, a portion of this voices, both old andI new, into the Oan onda Apriei'.MadMspring's voluntary work crew has distinctive Russian ganaopenedsatseris based on self-Airesing interest is caused by th spring' luntary flwrki cpore hsistntv usa hioista portraiture at the Margaret Brownatthat the British are leavingbe lnigfoesi apaora-e the dawing caa-d of the show - Gallery in Boston. The collectionhe territor-y. Therefore there is a ate locations around many of the with hardly any touble at all. Of fourteen pictures are all newacuum left, and the U.S. would faculty houses. These, however. ORIGINAL GROUP works and have never been exibit-ike to fill it. But we have many aie but two of many private at- The Don Cossack's are perhaps edbfoe0D ipetitors, notably Russia, who tem"pts at relandscaping the P.A. one of the most original choral e eoetas been gaining much prestige, campus. groups today. They have a very yundiferent cMas lorgain hifsoc ately by sellin garms to the Mid- COORDINATION wide range of voices, both bass andfrn shaces, M-'Mra ao~l atr onre.tenor, and sometimes their ar- achieved a unique way of showingi h rEast iscpratt ihteie i oriaigrneet oundamotelkean her own Personality. For example,

ther countries, Mr. Kinsey be- these individual enterprises into orchestra. The chorus achieves mu-- if the feeling of sadness is desired,It eves mainly because of its oil, one concerted effort, the Campus sical effects unlike those of any Serge Jaroff leads the Don Cossack a sade of blue or puiple might be5 pe cen ofEurope's oil comes Landscape Project Committee has other group. The tenors and basses Chorus, used in the facial coloring, how-rnis region - two-thirds ot been organized with Mrs. Benton have an unmatchable richness sixth, in Geor-ge Washington Hall. ever if gavety is being expressed,te world's oil, as head of the Ladies Committee, which is shown off to great advani- As usual, all student tickets will the color will tend to be muchThe next point which was and Mr. Morgan - a trained land- tage in the church music be f ree. These may be obtained at brighter.rought up is that of the Arab-JTew scape architect - as chairman of The Don Cossack's program is the printing office in the basement Shape can be us.ed for the sametgnistic interrelationships. In the entir-e enterprise. The plan at divided into three parts. They sing of G. W. on Wednesday from, one purpose. In El Greco's saintly pie-148 most of the Arabs in Israel the moment is to get either the church, army, and folk music. The to three in the afternoon. tures, for instance, the faces arereforced to leave, but a few re- Ohinstead Brothers or some cm- group's piece-de-resistance is the always painted in a tall and nar-aimed. The International Work parable firm to come back and helo awe-inspiring Russian dances. No LIBRARY INVENTORY row fashion. This is to portray.Camps were set up to help get a reorganize the looks of the campus, doubt the P.A. audience will espe- Aiot20bkshvbesre Aotheir exliample wuld eaveat thttrunderstanding between the This ob, however, is not merely cially appreciate the soft-soled, p ort 200~n bok he bn rry ohr xml wudb ta hArabsand Iraeltes b havng one of planting trees in seemingly heavy-footed dancea-s who close this year. It iiould be greatly ap- logwnging lines of a tomb re-them ork ogeter o varous ro- appropriate places, because the ar- each set of songs with rousing preciated by the Library staff if piesent depression.~ is r isy nor ve chitect in charge is obliged to make shouting and stamping Russian each boy checked his closet, draw- Mrs. Morgan has been a residentat thse caps wrk, ten cted allowances for future buildings, dances. ;ero, etc., for missing books. Miss Of Andover ever since 1940. For atit which e had witha and future wings. Without this FREE: TicxET IEades also feels that if students are while she combined her art with acariiP near the Egypt-Israel border, kind of foresight the endeavor The Don Cossack's performance hnksre oal lout ilie oiuth sechasg deote all bofbu hretientoyin which Arabs and Jews mingled might be proved to have been use- will begin at eight-fifteen in the1 bokq netoar. oswl em h a dvtdalo e iet(Continued on Page Six) less within a few years. evening, Friday, April twenty- l~.nx er painting.

Page 2: n1857 2LclILioiIlfTer - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1957/04251957.pdf · Japanese cherry trees ... the Campus sical effects unlike those of any Serge Jaroff leads the Don

Page 2 The Phillipian April 25, 19.5

0"70m unu Communicatiton Abbott Stars As Philo !,hW1djJ H I I.LI I" i*II~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ edal concening Abtcheer- Ga n in s ire U b ne1~Ainx LL P an ~ ~~~~~~~~~leaders, I was amazed at the pa-Ga Enie Ar Un ii ic "-

per's attitude towards the problem The resolution of last week's Pi'io delbate w.-F T i.Editor-in-Chief..................................JON MIDDLEBROOK of school spirit. It seems that THE ternal combustion engine is beneficial to society." The nega.Managing Editor..................................J OCK MCBAINE PIrLLIPIAN does not show much tive team of Les Simpson, Fred Prahl, and John 1Rcclkwcll wvo;Business Manager...........................DAVID WINEBRENNER faith in the student body which it

EDITORIAL STAFF represents or in the cheerleaders both the floor vote and thewho carry the responsibility of the judges' decision, defeating an af- S 'j L Era i-

General Manager ................................. JOHN RoCKWVELL school's enthusiasm and spirit. firmative team of Jock Mcflaine,Executive Editor ................................... BILL WEEDEN THE PHILLIPIAN, in its sugges- John Reid, and Sam Abbott. TheOf N v rSpportEitoEdito ..... BILL...ST........tion...to.....r....w..gir....c.eer...eaderTIES iudgesbrroweirechMr.edeAlliss wrer.. Alarssr. ,ars, O 'L, a i a?,fAssig-nment Editor ................................... BOB POSNER from Abbot Academy, is tepping and Mr. Weaver.News Editor......................................DAVID OTHMER into a problem which must be se- Jock XcBaine opened the debateT Co-Features Editors ............. KLAuSs KEitEss, PErIER BIENSTOCK riously considered by all. At the for the affirmative. He offerredT ke T il CCopy Editor ....................................... JOHN CHARLTON first meeting of the new P.A. condolences to the negative andi At 0800 on the morning of Ilk,,Photographic Editor .............................. . DAVID OTHMFR cheerleaders, the topic of help from Pointed out that the internal cn- 4th, the students of the Navigatr-Assistant Sports Editor . .................. DICK BLAND Abbot was thoroughly discussed, bustion engine is largely respon- class will be on their w ay out-Editorial Advisor ............... . ..... HENRY BOURNE and the group came to a unani- sible for America's position today. sea. This year's PA. navigato.Editorial Advisor . .................... ARKIE ICOEHL mous decision: NO! He also showed how many people include Tim Ross, Dick Keit'

THE PHILLIPrAN seems quite are dependent, directly and indir- John Ledyard, Jeff Eiseman, JoirBUSINESS BOARD worried about the enthusiasm of ectly, on the internal combustion Ives. and their instructor, Ill'

Advertising Manager...................................YUAN YU the student body towards its teams. engine for a living. Drake.Co-Girculation Managers . STEVE MOCEARY, PETER WELLS ~But how can Abbot girls remedy a Les Simpson then opened for the Prsniln al£'toc

situation in which the school is nt negative. The main products of the to board the Navyv destr-oyer-soadequately supporting its func- internal combustion engine, h as- U.S.S. Johonnie Hutchins, at wtj

THE PHILLIPIAN is published Thursday during the school year by THE tions? Haw can a group of girls serted, are dirt, grease, and fumes., rosto Naval Siyard Or atu-PHILLIPIAN board. Entered as second class matter at the post office at who are not even a part of P. A. By-pproducts, he went on, are man-daMy th ndtrtuo-1Andover, Mass., under the act of March 3, 1879. Address all correspondence daMy4hadtreun o

concerningsubscriptin to SteveMochary o Peter Wels and advetisementsrepresent it or try to raise enthu- cal hot-rodders and sivering hO> Sunday the 5th. In speaking ab-a,to Yuan Yu care of THE PHILLIPLAN, George Washington Hall. School siasm? How can they begin to feel bies. The babies are shivering, the cruise, Mr. Drake stated t-subscription, $4.00. Mail subscription, $5.00. the pride and satisfaction in a win- Simpson expalined, because the fu- the hip will be mianeuvering o

THE PHILLIPIAN is distributed to subscribers at the Conimons and is for ning P.A. team" We feel that they el which should be used to heat the New, Erigland coast, and 11a!sale at the Andover Inn. THE PHILLIPIAN does not necessarily endorse cannot! The boys in this school their orphanages is being used to possibly make port at Newpo:-communications appearing on its Editorial page. are using the idea of girl cheer- propell the teen-age rebels. Rhode Island for a short time

Office of publication: Town Printing Company, 4 Park Street, Andover. leaders, only because they think it John Reid attacked the problem Saturday evening, May 4th.would be nice to have some females of a substitute for internal corn- During the cruise these studen-to look at during athletic events- bustion engines. He saw three al- will be given an opportunity to panot because they are worried about ternatives. The first, atom power, into practical use the knowledgeaE xplan ation . Tcheo cherledrrto.ai e enivne na ml cl.qie n ls hsya.Ti

school spirit. - ewas impractical because it hasn't; sea navigation which they have ac

Perhaps the thing fledgling journalists must be nmost this stanid because they feel that Sail power, too, is inefficient, and cludes charting the ship's coursr -wary of is overeagerness. Last wveek, we printed an editorial -girl cheerleaders will steal their rubber band drives are tiring, operating the ship's radar~ and 1k

thunder. They have acted only in Fred Prahi, for the negative, be-! ran gear, and plotting celcSI' Isupporting a plan for Abbot cheerleaders. We were strongly the best interest of 'PA.; if you gan by saying that the internal lines of navit-ation.Iin favor of the suggestion and said so. As we had hoped and consider the problem seriously, I (Continued on Page Three) (Conlinu'd on Pag'- Thrce) Iplanned, we received various letters and comments on our sug- think you'll agree with this point

gestion, both for and against it. of view. However, if the student fzffzeq~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 076 74 Pe~~~~~~~~~o ve. oevr i hesudn ,'Lgestion, both for and against it. body feels that the-only way they ' " '' ' '

One letter- was from the head cheerleader. He explained can get excited is through grsat some leghhsadteceredr .iw oouplnHewe should have a very unsilccess- ?I D

length his and the cheerleaders~~ views on our plan. He ful season in the future. -P!~'~was direct and covered the point thoroughly. THE PHILLIPIAN Ican assure you that the cheer- a

regrets only that the cheerleaders feel we lack faith in the leaders will do their best to pro- by PEMrO EMNSTOCK

P.A. student body. It just isn't so. We were merely making a mote school spirit. We need YOURhelp, not that of outsiders. Letb's Abbot-Anidover relations have hit a new peak with te story in trsuggestion for a known problem. all srt this prinig-GET OUT week's "Life" of the adventures, during College Week in Bezmuda, a

In reply to the cheerleaders' letter, the editors wrote an AND SUPPORT YOUR TEAMS. a well-traveled miss from down the streoL and a P.A. graduate. TI

edioril lstSunaytobe printed in this week's paper. Then, (Signed) Sincerely, Young man in question has devised a fascinating system through whicediTriayas Sunay, lando h Fclysdcso he is able to have all his expenses paid by his female comilanions. T_

on Tuesday morning, we learned of the Faculty's decision EDDIE PERELL, pqssibilities are unlimited under this exeiting syrteon. Thle nText t,against bbot cherleader. Needlss to sa, we kiled theHead Cheerleader will be to have the girl pick you up at youa- door at tlbrI tart of I

editorial just before this issue wvent to press. Our purpose is e;vening and present you with a bouiquet of flowers. Thieni shle will 'Co

to make suggestions, not to wage an open campaign against P. A. Concert Band in and your parents will scrutinize her fromi head to toe, conclude rthe Faculty. a pleasant, "Have a grand time, but don't bring- Greg back ico late."Serenades M * ~~Of course, the boy will have to have sonmc "mnad mioney" withl 1..

We have printed, however, the cheerleaders letter, for S r ad s A u but the girl will do all the spending, and driving, anld parking.several reasons. First of all, it is a signed letter in reply to aThmoesadonucdtsculb ptitaseilfndr

specifc poit we aisedin aneditoral. I is or polcy toprintAt Boston Dinner which to establish an annual Andover Bermuda Scholarship. i

such letters. We think it a good way to stimulate interest in LatWdedyeeigtePAwould be awarded to the student most deserving on the basis of aboth our editorials and in student affairs. Lascet Wednedaye evein the Pmn A crupulouness, suavity, lecherousness, and all-around high Standing

Secondly, the cheerleaders' letri h is omnc-Dinner, held in the banquet hail of teee fhsshomtstion which the newvPHILLIPIAN board has received and which Boston's Museum of Science. This 4

merits publication. We offer it as a model for future letters. It concert marked a giant step as far Eas Band Prestige is concerned. It I

is written in direct reply to a PHILLIPIAN suggestion. Whether was the first time in a number of One of the better comments wc've heard all year- in Philo ernieit is for or against our plan is immaterial. This kind of direct, years that the student musicians ti eksdbt ntemrt ftcgsln nie nasc

purposeful letter is the type we wan~~~to print. school without sharing the spot the assertion that cars, with their filthy ex]hausts, are detrimentalAiid finally, the cheerleaders' letter raises a question light with the Chorus or Orchestra, society, rebuttalist Sam Abbott commented, "May I reind our epp:

which is still very much an issue, how to boost school Spirit. The Concert, on the whole, was on ents that human beings also have exhausts. And if these e-xhaus ts aTHE PHILLIPIAN has made a suggestion which has been turned a par with the high standards set used in concentrated areas, they'd make quite a mes, too.-

during previous efforts, and wasdown. We stand ready to print any others which may come, warmly received by the audience. ' i

Under the baton of Band Direc-tor William B. Clift the group ofG ratitu d e ... 50-odd performers ran through The otber day we happened to be b,-owiing thrloug 1snIII college c.their usual concert program. Cre- logs, and came upon one -which contained the following ispirilng 1T!,

Last week's PILLIPIAN carred a news relase from Mi'.dit for the rapid improvement of age (the names have been changed est thesho' disin jLastweeks PILLIIAN arred anewsrelase romMr.the group during the past two flooded by Andover men's applications) :ICsho'adiinsIU

Kemper's office announcing that Andover had received from terms must be given to Mr. Clift. "High on her- hill of beauty stands Winsockie!, overlooking the stonthe estate of Louise de Dombrowski a very large sum of money Since taking over last Fall Term, WinnepeakeRvr ls ytl uit o e 1'psd,.

he has molded the Band into a peakeRvr ls yteqan ono e uapsdn'for student scholarships. To say that the school is deeply, group of musicians, competent by to pre-Revolutionary times .... The cntur-y-old oaks and elms makergrateful for the opportunity to help More needy students any standards, and superior to three-hundi-ed-acre camlpurs at any season 'a thing of beauty and I 1'

would be an understatement. most similar groups. The program forever'....The spirit of fellowship that prevails at Wirisockic servS'Too manyof us ar inclind to fee that Aidovei' s self-for the Alumni affair was designed enrich the lives of all who come to know and love her. F Winso.

sufct man needs the supporeto fnoe. ThisAdo isn so.Suc specifically to prove this. The Band is more than a college on a hill. She is, in wvords of one of hlei rnsuffcien an nees te supor of o on. Tis in'tso. uchamply demonstrated its versatility leaders, a mount of Privilege, where knowledge, culture, beauty

gifts as that of Louise de Dombrowski are our staff of life, last Wednesday, playing every- good-will reign.'"thing from Football Marches and

But there is more to the gift than money. That Andover can College Songs, to Latin-American We ehdfnse ednw atndt u w .. cn,and does inspire such generosity, from its alumni and friends selections, contemporary European to find out how many Andover men had availed them-selves of is ifl3

is a constant reminder that we hold a respected and important pieces, and Dixieland Jazz a a nificent opportunity for four years of uninterrupted "knowledge, Cipaein American scnayeducation. We efterdby Phinney's Favorite Five. ture, beauty and good-will." We wvere shocked to discover that not !

place secondary are flattered ~~~~~~~~~iA march of World War I vin- of last year's Seniors applied for old Winsockie. Obviously they !",Louise de Dombrowski's gift. *(Continued on Page Three) have realized that they were'nt quite up to being members of ue h

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April 25, 1957 The Phillipian Page 3

~~~Vorks Of ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~(Cntnudfrom Page'One) sgpp;gz g; :s g ; ue;; 9 :they metthebuotle orthas boteShown At Addison Art Galleryhoetp thebhot.e or hate Harold Phi~nney's

From April 19th through May '5th, theAddison Gallery man -ever mettheir-employer.

of American Art wvill be displaying paintings by a group of While the guests-are assembledtwele Anoverartstsin aditon t scuptue -wrk 'y a'fo ccktails priort4u going in to

t~velve Adover arists,_indditionosculptue _workb "ndinner, 'a voice 'cmes out of the l7 ir acsig vryneprsnt i-R ecord Shopadded member of the group. aiacsn vroepeet nEach artist has submitted three Band cluding the two -house servants,paintings to the exibit, which has (Continued from Page Two) tec sor-o mh urnr of whurdac-noalso been in Boston and rldtg "vrThere", -ws'etrdviction can be got in the courts butMaine. The purpose is to aru~ o itag,r "Over trevomwa ~ute sr~fmre nwihacn ,

Clinterest in this display, whih Mgl 2a=111gh .CftVnaanurder just the same. And while W E 'Rcal which -annul, ~amiii~ ii~ " I 'll~- -thiey are exchanging data on them-

received favorable comments from %ble to "cut -.ft. IIOrhd wolme -al- selves and on their host (who has -

critics while in Boston. The artists -mtc~st in 'ital, '-thqy muu - to sent word he will not be down n- " are not entirely representative of matah The divinsethusigin.sjf-the til the next day) one of the ten M OI -FV N Andover, as the group formed to- -pecs 'The "'Tmw;et 'WtiOn 'M little Indian statuettes topples of!'gether on own initiative and was hmme eijptsuil-he anlice ndbakadnot chosen. IY, tmughoutteUMS ,- :,as immediately thereafter the giddy to 26 PARK STREET

Several of the Andover Aist -nreslt,L Lso~:Iw~ Boi-g' Oxonian chokes to death of cyan-such as Patrick and Maud Morgan, hornin 'vmmhe;`wazSp6-,I~ht- ide of potassium which some oneand Frances Dalton are well- -_d.next._TIe-, et~f teRbuiP`W~s has dropped into his drink. One across from the firehouseknown, others not. Patrick Mor- ihw 016d41Zt1e'drn down and ine to go.gan's "Bird" is drawn with sopli- the ~peifornmunce aft "hider TParis Te xieetbgn nfled curved lines, but the color de- -Skies"!, - -Peud 7Wal . rmuged Thnteectmetbgn-nsign is intricate. Mrs. Morgan's in te Gleln ;Mille -mmr 'n never lets down until the final cur- o raon A s,Gordon's Plant" makes an equally 'ohe-nt n'~ad,!XiIroij",a 01 tin. The nreseilsacsdo raon A sbrilliant suggestion f a flower pot Ts&ting -.egine, - 'ee-ad o va'ry Of murder 'by operating whileand the plant's crinkled leaves. -theteiWftheevalnbdforethe- drunk, is pushed off a cliff; the

While the'Morgan's pictures ap- gru lIfftebc-t~at~eP. I judge, 'who sentenced an innocentproach abstraction, the rest of the -ter tempo 'layhag "Silver 'i"' mhanr 'th *de iushoound lm in aishowings vary strongly, although a '-The'o'nly egret~peems-to~have~been hair th apinshter woundroin hiapleasant level of competence s by sapecial -equest -Ifrm 'he ard - hera; i the siier, h doveatch--:---' t i maintained throughout. The paint- -enceevn.il-o ucdi ipac ______

ings by the wives of several facul- ,Gremlin Hflall, fegturing cott ed with a hypodermic; the detec- D m r ' M orrissey Taxity members are notewoi-thy; Lee Marsh ad Vern TPrntt in- Tenor tive, -who -caused an innocent manBrown's "Drawings" express ama- S - has -always b-een a show- to die, is garroted; the general, Shoe Service Two-Way Radios - nstant Servicezing simplicity and honesty, while stopper for the Band, ts appeal who sent his wife's lover on a fa- -7CRVirginia Powel's semi-abstract seems to be universal, and the ta ission, is stabbed; and so oi, 'Expert Shoe Repair -7CR

"Boy on a Bicycle" is also well- Alumni proved no exception, a in a hantasmagoria of gruesome O pst h irr 3 akS.Tlpoe5done. The light colors that Lee plauding warmly at its conclusion. (and very comical) details, invol- -OpoteheLray- I2PrkS.Tlhne5Brown uses are in strong contrast Teh only regret seems to have been ving clues, explanations, suspici-' to the deep and powerful tones that that Mr. Clift hadn't come to And- ons and terror."COMG 15 rCCAOLCN

appear n Giriansky's works. Well- over twenty years earlier. The four leading roles are those CPVJN SYTE OACL OPN

planned and harmonious are evi- of Vera, the detective, the judge,'dent in Ann Fisks drawings. Pati- ~Cruise an'omadaTe vwl e play-ence Haley's "Low Tide" is a land- ed by Mrs. Bensley; 'aeCt-scape with lots of mystery and (Continued from Page Two) cart, Workshop president; Jerrymood to it. The sculptures b Nich- In15 h .. nvgto lsMalone; and Tom Weisbuch. Oth,'olas Edmonds are a valued addi- -took a similar cruise to New Yik ers in the cast are Henry Munn, -'

tion; one of a figure kneeling has 'on the same ship. 'Mr. Drake feels Mike Fitzgibbon, Elon Gilbert,a convincing angular intensity. ~tbat the forthcoming cruise should Justin Lindy, Mrs. McClellan, WIN

ANDOVER ~ SCHOOLS 'be as successful as the previous Steve Dingilian, and Debbie' ANDOM PBLICSCHOLS one. Hayes,,although the last is not de- -

Simultaneously, the Gallery is Navigation is a course not of- finite-atithe time of this writing. '

also featuring work by the Ando- fered by many other secondar'v

~~~~~ ~~schools. At PA, the class meets Philotwo hours a week and is open to

Kitchenivare - Tools those students who are taking (otne riaPieTo'Math 4 or who have taken its equi- combustion engine promotes con-

Sporting Goods valent. The coul'se consists of'one formity and ovei-dependance onterm each of piloting, nautical as- cars, Hie 'iwi wvent on to the geat

Paints- WOIIpaperti-onoy anlcelesI navigation. futie 'riands offer rocket fuelThe annual training cruise, whichl used fr trips to space stations and

Gadgets ~usually' ontes in the Spring Term, the Moon. Tomorrow's will need theGadgets ~offers -gtudeilts the opportunity to fuel 'which today's maniacs are us-

5's ~put classroom theory into practi- ing, was his conclusion.TIL 'cal use. John Rockwel, negative rebut-

t~ i:-:~:-tlest, was sori'y, but the affnnativehad nothing which he could rebut.

45 MAIN STRRET l~to ' Pharmiacy 'He would, he said, "ti'y to salvage

Tcls. 162 - 1727 Isomething from the wreckage."1 6 Main Street The wreckage, as he saw it, wasI ~~~~~~~~that 'MeBaine had spent his time

MzXXXX-XzxzXzXZZZZZZX 2 .XX-- explaining what he was about to,:;z~~z:;;;:;,rz:;;;~~z;ZZ;;Z ~ say, a-nd that Reid had built his

case on what Mc'Baine hadn't said.He did, however, admire the afirm-'ative's conclusion that rubber band

drive wasn't pi-actical. S S

The A doe and Merrimack a completely hilarious mote. 'Thenegative, he said, -was very inter-ested in exhausts; they said thatthe evil df internal combustion en-gines is exhaust. "But," he went on

T~~auona~~~~ Bank ~~~to say, "may I remind you that hu-N ational Bank' ~ ~~~~man beings, too, have exhausts?" We'd like to admit right here and now that the-Abbott apologized that the nega-tive didn't appreciate the affirma- main reason we run advertisements like this is totive's debating skill. "After all," get you, dear reader, to drink Coca-Cola to thehe closed, "we d7o try."-

ANDOVER, GEORGETOWN, HAVEIKHILL, "MERR1M'AC, ~~~~~i exclusion of all other beverages. Thesooner you start going along with us, the sooner

PARDNERS we'll both begin to get more out of life.NORTH ANDOA/TR

'Dean 'Martin "and Jerry Lwsthe 'former comedy teaui, cvr

wihtheir usual gusto throughtitake-off on Westerns. Jerryia* STUDENT ACCOUNTS WELCOME dude who goes West and becomesSG OF GOOD TASTEsheriff. Some :funny scenes result;anyone who has seen at least oneMartia-and.Lewis picture can ima-

- fermbe, Feacral Deposit Insurance Corporation -gine 'what they 'are. In VistaVision, BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY 0F THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BYcolor, and featuring Lori Nelson,

~~~ ~this is amusing fare. SALEM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., INC.

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Page 4 The Phillipian April 25, 1957

Baseball Beats Tufts Frosh, Loses To Newton Hig

On the Sidelines P il*I icigHglgt ut a eGlimpses Of P. A. Sports PpsPicigHhihtTusGae

Murphy, Bill Creese Shine Against Newton__________________________by BILL STILES The long awaited hits came last Wednesday for Coach Wilkie and his varsity baseball

Last week P. A. sawv most of the varsity sports getting team. Coupled with good fielding, this gave the Blue a 4-1 victory over Tufts Freshmaninto full swing. The lacrosse team managed to crump an in- Capt. Wally Phillips turned in his usual superlative pitching performance, allowing no runs

feror ufts Foshsqadwit atackanBill Miles display- and only five hits in seven in.ing some brilliant stick work G. olf Defeated ynns hlis a h ut aby racking up four goals and two j y ies n ~ asters completely under control, byassists for the Blue. Again on Sat- Jay Neso Sar Y le; in. Wistring alout wing only on3fs ,aaturday, Miles scored twice on thejk Ttof re~L' Jt~~~IJViLZand alloigold oeTft.aHarvard Freshmen, who had pre-PAs J. V.'s Lose o-5 u.t reachy third. we b Jhviously been beaten by Deerfield. Dave Barnumn Ties Wlywsfloe yJh

At last Saturday's track meet D Hurlbut, who allowed the onlyagainst Borwn, Andover men real- To P unchard Five Last Saturday the Andover golf Tufts run and two hits in two in.

ly loked ht in he wight epart The ndovr Junor Vasityteam played host to the Yale team nings. The run was unearned, comnlentooed Baie in topegh codition, basel sAdoeJntior sasony at the Andover Countny Club. The ing as a result of an error and to

men. Td ailyin opconitonbasbal sua opne thirseaonfinal score of the match was one singles.improved his previous distance by losing their game to the Pun- win fr Andover, five losses, andThhitrbokouofheconsiderably to grab first for An- chard High varsity last Saturday. ont.Ca.DleLnsy thelump lied brke hious fteindover. In the shot Captain Tom Dividing the pitching duties for otie. nuaber onle mandayte Ottop loers who ack hleteead

Dignanand Sprky Lwis boh the lue tam wer Ed SprgeonYale's top man, Gilison, and de- two hits. Rogers' tvo run single kbroke fifty feet, but were no match and Steve Mochary. feated him five up with three holesfor Brown's man who kept lob- the fourth was the big blow of thebing them way out onto the grass. In the Blue first inning, Jay Nel- to play. Despite a strong wind, game, Whitehouse singled twiceScotty Marsh glided over the fin- son ingled and was soon driven Lindsay played very well to turn diigi u ihhsscnish line in the 880 to gain P.A.'s home by Whit Smythe's "homer", back his man by shooting a 8 on divin inb arn wroth hin s enonly other first, actually a smashing triple to cen- the front nine. other P.A. run with a single in the

In spite of the moderate amount ter followed by an error on the Weiss of Yale defeated Ando- ffhof noise the newly elected cheer- throw to home. After the next two ver's Bill McEwan three up with leaders produced from the crowd batters grounded out, Mike Sher- two holes left. McEwan wasn't The Andover runs went as flat last Saturday's baseball game, man tripled but was left on base playing true to his usual form and lows: In the fourth, Whitehouse New-ton (last year's high school by a third out. The lead-off batter fell behind on the first nine; on the - ~~ singled, went to second as Adzigian 2champs of Massachusetts) out- for Andover, Eric Norlin, singled second nine he began to play better Second baseman Jack Whitehouse third;b atters aiince tplayed Andover both in the field and was driven to third by catcher but Weiss matched him and went rounding third in the Tufts game. tohecnrd b o th scoredion ent tiand at bat. In the last few innings, John Reid's hard double to right. on to win. tosecond)_andbthscoredonRgpitcher Wally Phillips didn't look When the next batter grounded to (Continued on Page Six)er'aomntndsig. as good as he had against Tufts the third baseman, Norlin was tag- In the fifth, Bill Creese walked, Band Lawrence. The Blue team real- ged in a run-down. Jay Nelson, Turchik Shines As was sacrificed to second by Chicoly didn't have a rally until the most consistent hitter of the day, Vldjladsoe nWi,last half of the eighth when, the then singled to right field, but Reid houTsV~esly aindle scoedn Whiteusbases loaded, Manch Wheeler and was caught trying to reach hm J n o asebal I stole second and scored on WatBPete Mattern scored. It was good plate. The inning ended whnthe G IG F R A ? ters, single.to see Ben Field pinch-hitting and next batter struck out, leaving thlzfatd 2 T 5again playing. Ben, a returning bases loaded. D fae ,T The fielding was excellent, withletterman, has been disabled with The top of the third roved to The Andover Junior baseball R N only one error being conunitted&a knee injury received last fall, be the Blue's undoing, as Punchard squad took a beating at the hands VaYeulbn Vieoseple

During the past week crew, An- scored five runs. Behind by two of the Haverhill Freshman-Sopho- INNER a snappy double play to end adover's newest sport, has been get- runs now, the Blue gathered one more team on the field behind John-Tut thetitefor.Teting in shape for their first race more tally in their half of the in- son Hall last Wednesday, 12-5. outfield played equally as well.of the season against the M.T. ning from the three-baggers of Tony Rogers, who pitched te first J CR boatcliped iteen sed ffs Norlin and Sherman. When the 3 'A innings for Andover, was the Newtontt

boat lippe fifeen scond inning ended the score was 5-3, official losing pitcher, while Bracci "ayutheir best this season, to row a Punchard's favor. In the bottom of pitched the full game for Havr- &v akf P.A.'s varsity baseball team asHenley course in six minutes and the fifth P.A. added two runs. The hill. **wo defeated by Newton High last Sat-forty seconds during last Satur- Andover rally was the result of The Haverhill 14-hit attack was Oytss~ko$*l urday, 6-2, and the story behindday's practice. Last year, in some two walks given to Mike Sherman highlighted by twvo tremendous dooied' the game can be summed up pretty rough water, M.I.T. beat and flex Morse, a deep fly ball to slams in the first and sixth innings. two words: No Hits. Actually, theour first boat by some four lengths. right by Eric Norlin, and a fly to The first, hit by first baseman Co- two olthe were sathits autBecause the water on the Merriinac left hit by Reid. itio hit the third story of Johnson too hs eesrthht isu't quite as fast as it was at this Hall, but was relayed back in time the other came too late to do anytimne last year, the first boat's time But a scant run ahead, the Pun- to hold the runner- to a triple. The good.doesn't really look as good as last chard nine brought their tallies up second hit the roof of the infirm- Atog h itn a oayear's did about now. However, to the final number when, with two ary, and went for' a home run by l nethough t hi dingwan~tdthere's been quite a bit of wind and out, two players reached base o' pitcher Bracci. Jim Turchik made lytcinffectv, nt pt e pfieli anchoppy water so that the boys will errors by the second baseman; ad- one outstanding catch at right field Jh uiu tre ntercebe used to it when rowing in vanced when a throw to base ra- as, speeding in and falling, he held forn Hurlband gtaed u t runeaway meets. (Continued on Page Six) onto a long Haverhill fly. frPA n aeu w uso______________________________________________________ Hitting was a weak spot for the two hits in four innings, but alk-a

Andover squad, as they came in Snl Breasted White Shawl ed six and was constantly in trochwith three hits to Haverhill four- Snl le. Johnny Murphy pitched the

teen, one over a ~~~~~~~~~innings, giving up three runs nte.P.A. had only ehit ovraCollar Coat and Tuxedo Pants two hits, but both these runs were hiFOR EXCELLENT FOOD single, a double by third baseman unaned;an MupystingiRandy Ross in the sixth, while 60 utnsxav an effec tipriking

IN A PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE ~~~Haverhill had a double, two trip- mac.W yPillp efcinise npeIN A PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE ~les, and a home run. an Wawld, giip aiise runOn the whole, the P.A. nineanwswidgvnguarn

EAT AT made only one tremendously ex- jcueo ak nerrb ipensive fielding error, as on a opj self, and a wild pitch.fly between the plate and first base The fielding, which had held P

~~N~~~N U ~~~~and an overthrow, the Haverhill brilliantly in the first game agaisL E V A G G F S ~ ~~~~~~~~runner took all the bases toscr.Tfsaoclape.M chWBase running all through the ler made a throwing error whOc

game involved a large amount of led to a run and Chico ValldejulFstealing, especially by Haverhill.I whose fielding had been spectacu.the greater part of which was suc- lar previously, committed two e'cessful. Irors, one of which ed to two r5

Ilaverhill Bracci pitched the en- Phillips' error led to the fourth n_________________________________tire game, striking out nine, walk- earned run for Newton.ing seven, and heaving one wildpitch. On the P. A. mound, Rogers On the brighter side was an e-struck out two gave up nine hits. 11ln aebhidtepaebwalked one, and pitched two wild Billy Creese, who also contribut

in 3A innings, hil Dubocqi a asharp single to drive in a struck out five, gave up five hits, adsoe islf ee atrwalked five, and threw one wild looked good in right field, 0l0ng

6 miles south of Andover on Route 28 pitch. Rogers gave up four earned, wit Murphy's pitching.runs, Dubocq three, and Haver-- I This game also marked the hill's Bracci four. 56 MAIN ST., ANDOVER, MASS, appearance of Ben Field, who

NORTH READING, MASSACHUSETTSP.A. catcher Woody Woods was! been sidelined for months withbeaned early in the game. With hisI knee injury. Field pinch-hit 'return, the team should be a lot I Dave Adzigian in the fifth and estronger. maied in the game.

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7 April 25, 1957 The Phillipian Page 5

ITrack Swamped 90-35; Lacrosse Team Splits PairTrack Loses To Brown Miles,. Van Amerongen Lead Blue AsAsBietisH m e Lacrosse Crushes Tufts Frosh, 15-1;

1. ~~~~~~~~Defeated By Harvard Freshmen, 9-4The varsity track team suffered its second straight de- Last Wednesday afternoon the Andover lacrosse team, playing without the services of

feat of the season Saturday to a strong Brown Frosh team. Dick Nordhaus, Norm Higgins, Gil Bamford, Blitz Fox, and Tom Gildehaus, swamped anTefinal oewsAndover - 36 3/10, Brown Frosh - 89 1/10. extremely inferior Tufts Freshman team, 15-1. The game, although it was no contest what-

In thre hamm-r, the frs~, event soever, was an excelelnt sea-lfte afternoon, Ted Bailey won, Vj0 irack Loses son opener, since it gave everyone

for the Blue with a heave of 172'3". a chance to play. Because of theHead ookthrd.Th jaeln 1~ 1Tufts' playing, the PA. ball-hand-

Heard twok himprd Th asif e Naveli ''nC ling also was very poor; neverthe-breeze, as swept by the Frosh. lesevrynegane vlublDoug Crowe, a member of the Blue i ~ ~ ~ A playing experience. Had it not

trak team last year, was second Ibeen for the-.expert play of thefor the Frosh. Brown's Cnner' A promising but still unpolished Tufts goalie it is possible that thetook first in the pole vault with junior varsity track team conced- loe-sided hae it e was.nTmenthe bar resting at an even leven ed a 52-37 defeat to Central Catho- o-ie hni a.Tm n

dfeet. Bob Dent was second for An- lic last Wednesday. Disregarding time again, he made difficult savesdover and wvas followed with a five the loss, the team functioned as aprvnigadtolP..olsway tie for third. our of the five. -,vell-balanced unit with all events IStarring for the Blue at defense

wre frorm P.A. Coquette's out- represented quite satisfactorily.weeBlStligadMcRanstanding put of 56' 10" or Browvn The first event of thedates weell StBringol and Bacreednc-as too far for Andove 's Cpt 'I 120-yard high hurdles, roved toatheidelspsndBlMls

1,' and 50' 2" r'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~atte ifil sosad'il ieeTo3 Dofa' and Spacrky Lewi3' be a Central Catholic victory un- - on the attack. Miles was the lead-tiely. of vely, aputo 2, re-der the leadership of Reagan's 17.0 ing ~-corer with four goals and two

Dunlevy swept the broad Junip f- Andover's Jean Missud, who ran - sit.LuVnAeogncmthe Fresh. The winning jump was into pacing trouble at the last hur- Clark chargcs goal as unidentified player shoots. Brian Golden and Charlie Clark

n21' 8 A". dle. In the 100-yard dash the Blue's each had two. Others who added aTim Orcutt. back into actoi af- second place man, Bob Hull, was .tlywr ereBed onLd

It ter missing the Harvard meet be- edged out by double-winner Cam- _____________________________ Iyard, Dan Adams, and Mike Gol-,.cause of a sore foot, tied for firist use of C.C., whose winning time _____________~dn

in the high jump with Bown's was 10.5. The mile vent proved to GdnBetterton at 5' 6". Paul of Browvn be a Central Catholic sweep led by

as third. McCarthy. Andover's first man to Ha v rThe discus marked the first tni finish in this race was John Charl-

in two season's that D:gnan has ton. In the 440 promising Junior The Andover lacrosse team jour-licot won, le was edged out b Flash IHagenbuckle broke away neyed to Cambridge this past Sat-Brown's Choquette, whose throw from the tight group of runners at urday to take on the powerful Har-

was 126' 4", as Nanpy Mf-cNaugh- the halfway point and placed but a -~vard Freshmen squad. Contrary oa-i took third, few yards behind Central's Caniu- Wednesday's trouncing of Tufts,In the 120 yard hurdles only Paul so and his 55.7 clocking. the Blue suffered it's first defeat of

Kelly placed for Andover.slag In the broad jump, versatile ~\tesao -. Aan hta aing third. Again in the 1 yard Lower Alan Albright distanced an- eral probable starters because ofdash only one man placed for An- amazing 20 feet 5 inches. In the - ' eral porbable starters because ofdover, as Paul Armstrong took 180 yard low hurdles, Roger Mac- injuries.Thoucmofteg e-hird. Because of a slight error f kenzie beat out Jean Missud for was decided in the fis amdr20 yar-ds in the distance, the timeI second place. A former broad4 ing which the Crimson gained a 7-2

as a momentarily shocking 12.2 jumper, converted because of re- lead. However, Andover was ableThe mne was wn by MacArdle peated leg injuries, Mackenzie to keep the scoring even in the

ofBrown in the time o 4:51. Two should be varsity material. ~ eod half, getting two goals,~dconds behinc1 hiw ws Aiiovrer'- The 220-yard dash was a Cen- -which equaled the Harvard tallies

im Ste-wart. Ole Faergeman wa's tral victory in the fast time of 22.8 ~ifor the last two periods.le (Contins.,cd on Pc Six) (Continzed on Pacre Six) P.to h edatrtnse

itonds of the first priod when

P~~~A~~~ Tennis Defeated By ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~From that point until the nd ofAluwmni 8-1; Coillins And the half, Harvard maintained con-

~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~""' ~~~~~~~lightweight, cool, practical trol of the ball and dominatedd ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,* ~play. The reason for the Crimson'sChlickeing Win Doubltes OUR GOOD-LOOKING CORDACCA SUITS superiority was that when they got

the ball, for the most part, theyOil a Warm2 but gusty Easter afternoon the AndoverTh motrcnde lpetsipatcl were able to hold on to it. On the

Italumni team defeated the P. A. racquet-men 8-1 in an exhibi- ThYotrcn eeopet npatcl other hand, Andover made count-ion mac.poor court conditions, bright sun, and strong lihwih aeil or warn- weather are ic erorsedur thet irsut hlwjnl hon eved both teams; sophmnore at Yale, is playing high found in this season's selection of Boys' ball. The team appeared to be very

hut an infrmal atmoshcre madeon the ladder of the varsity squad "" hsnervous and tense.ut n iforal tmopbr-e adethere. Kirby's excellent serving Cohn.Ti odlocn odcasi

te afternoon pleasant for players didn't quite match his lack of ex-g godlkng orcasut The Blue defense composed ofand fans alike. .tprec as compared to that of his a fine ribbed cord of cotton, acetate and Bill Penny, Bill Sterling, Mae Ro-

P 3ar Wodur plye alansolder brothzr. This was the main is oeolormn tan, and George Whiteside shonetEnnis teacher, Jack Lynch, one Darn sjs n xml formntine Nor' Enrrland champion. (Mr. cause of his defeat. Ihogotth fenoLynch PIrved Don udge last fall T omi Cutler started off wellfarcthtae- sabces-eitntFr'dorBlMlstlidot th PA. camnpus ais a benefit fo r against his Harvard opponent Hen- farctta r -ahblcesersstno AndoeFraBil Milses alliednthe U.S. Olx-mpic Fund). Ever-y ry Holmes (P.A. '53). But Mr. and very practical. Blue or grey, sizes 13 to Adams each scored once. Three ofgaine, wasI, lo)Iv but Mr. Lynch em- Helm i e s' superb slicing ability Hradsgaswr crdbEl-zed out aea'l -5, 6-2. proved to be a little too much for 20, $28.50,i young men's, 3 5 to 37,, $32.50 hi Harvard' goa teresced by P

Capai Carie oliiIplayed I Tn:-360.A. lacrosse team in 1954 before en-~'ctrml wi 1 a good steady all- In other single matches. Al Lea- ter-ing the Marines. He alsoBut e bwed o avitt (P.A. 54) defeated Harold

Cortfanc.Bt ebwdoaI So 6, 6-0; and George Beatty ESTABLISHED1818 chipped in with two assists.Inore experienced opoet Mr. I A 5)oe hi asot Mr. Hulburd feels that the lossBob Joslin; 6-4, 6-2.(PA 50evsChiWawot

Upper Iri- Clclerinz also 16-1, 6-3. Both these matches werewaagodnefrthbyslr-nade oe of he bes showncs ~ lydhrd nd well. ed a great deal and he believes that

C, 'he d.11.Vnuf- Anclimax to the day was the in a couple of weeks, with plenty"- be nv ahckriln~ st r. Axol wpC ill a-l matcs played, won by of experience behind it, the team

'es-rfic.hutacrr-digto M - msf Ardovoi-'s Chickevr and Collins wi~(~J~()'~ ~ JJ~ vll be very much improved.,~i. 'nan h second sd-ye needs a lit- over Joslin and Hutnter. The two --- '-.-

llteii-nn)rovelient. L a w r i e went Andoverians played beautifully to- ~ trn41i9 bt ~~ oesig downfv~l'ti~- in Clong, ecitinggether and well deserved their 6-4, 44HSTN W OK1 C D M

9-7 victory. Accurate and skillfulj 346 MADISON AENUE, COR. -F TNWYR 7 .Y"match G-2ro 2I is igniican helful.46 NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY ST., BOSTON 16, MASS. AABE SHOP

N, \ SyoeHntrhdiekr s-ngwaZr thatpforthl frs CHICAGO LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO A IR CONDITIONEDZic drop shots, a he dfcated him time in many yeass, these are two 3CBR -OfODSRVICr)-2, 6-4. !rp amionf the top six men. On E

Loweri ir-by ones o't tohi thme shoulder-s of Lawrie Chickering 96 MAIN STR=T, ANDOVRhrotheo. aitlind (P.A. 55) -2, and Nick Saxton rest many of the'_____________________________ I

-0in a family match. Mait, a (Continued on Page Six)

Page 6: n1857 2LclILioiIlfTer - Phillipian Archivespdf.phillipian.net/1957/04251957.pdf · Japanese cherry trees ... the Campus sical effects unlike those of any Serge Jaroff leads the Don

Page 6 The Phillipian April 25, 1951

Golf cetoa go ofo th irtTrack ArtJV.B ebl(Continued from Page Four) over Krook to finally win six up (Continued from Page Five) (Continued from Page Three) (Continued from Page Four)

Dave Barnum played Yale's with five holes to go. narrowly beaten for third by Mayo ver Puublic schools, grades 8-12. rived too late, and scored when number three man, and the match In the last match of the day, of the Frosh. Keith was the only The students, who are pupils of double was hit to center field. Iended in a tie after the eighteenth Dermod Sullivan lost to Dave Bo- Andover man to place in the 440 Frances Dalton, have submitted the last half of the six inning, Anhole. But before they could play lin of Yale four down and three to yard dash as he took third. mn o s t I y semi-abstract drawings, dover was retired; and the. last inthe extra hole which would decide go. The match was all even Kelly and Missud copped second which are often interesting in their ning saw both teams retiringthe match, it was ruled that the coming UP to the twelfth hole, and and third in the 220 yard hurdles, complex simplicity. Careful-finish- short order; the final score somatch was a tie on account of then Bolin won the next four to but Berger of Brown won. In the ed clay figures portray figures at Punchard 8, Andover 5.darkness. Strangely, not one hole win. 220 yard dash Armstrong was the ranging from a bowler to St* en iwas tied in this match, and each T a ksole Andover man to place as he George. T n iman won nine of the eighteen J.V. T aktied for third. (otne rmPg icholes played. In the final event, the 880 yard 'Wed. (CntnudsromPgeFic

John Barry lost to Yale's num- (Continued from Page Five) run, Scatty Marsh worked his way temshpshisaonber four man in a very close for sprinter Sweeney. Placing out of a box and took first for the (Continued from Page One) Coach B a nt a was extrenelmatch. Barry and his opponent third was P.A.'s Hull. Nappy Mac- Blue. His winning time was 2:07.7. quite peaceably, pleased and much encouraged

were evn up afer sevnteen hles, Naghton nd Ed Rce grabed theThe lecture was concluded by a the showing of his team aga"

but Barry lost on the eighteenth as shot-put honors with first and statement declaring that the U. S. older and more experienced inehe hit a ball out of bounds, and his third, respectively; the winning 1 msbeordilatcnthfuBfrhnhecuaely told hopponent carded a six to win,. u a esrda 4fe. J ln H r c ture with regards to the Near racquet men that the alumni wou

Bill Baylleld lost to his man in Small, stocky McCarthy of Central Es.Aqeto eidwshl etebs lyr hywudithe only extra-hole match of the Catholic added a half mile victory after the speech was concluded, all season.day. One down on the seventeenth, to his mile honors, having breasted Jewelers - OpticiansBayfield sunk a long put to win the the tape ahead of teammate Ser- hole and to even the match, and win and Blue thinclad Bob Russ. Typeriter - Sales and Servicethey tied the eighteenth hole. On The higch jump ended in a two-way "Incomparable repair service Pbmii ndvethe nineteenth hole, the Yale man tid for first between Andover'swon as he got a par while Bayfield Rhinelander and Central Catholic's at no greater cost thanA

drove into the rough. Reagan at the height of 5 feet 4 ordinary work."ve n46 Main St. Phone 830 DL ~ s d i

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